Rotary Club of Ramna

Rotary Club of Ramna Rotary Club of Ramna
Rotary International District 3281, Bangladesh
Organised: 11 December 1976
Chartered: 25 April 1977
Club ID No. 16135

HISTORY >>

The Rotary Club of Club was sponsored by the Rotary Club of Dhaka, Governor’s Representative being Rtn PDG Mustafa Zaman Abbasi. First Meeting was held in early 1976 at 35, Hare Road, the Official Residence of Late Rtn PDG Aziz-ul-Haq of the Rotary Club of Comilla and the Member of the Council of Advisors of the Government of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh. Started regular meeting

of the Club at Ramna restaurant, venue shifted to IBA premises for sometime at the initiative and help of Prof. Shafiullah, Director, IBA, Dhaka University. Rtn PP PDG Habibullah Khan was appointed as High Commissioner for South Africa in 1995, he was also the Minister in charge of the Ministry of Information of the Govt. of the People’s Republic of Bangladesh. In early 1977, the regular meeting place was shifted to Dhaka Club and subsequently to Sonargaon Hotel immediately after its opening and then again, to Dhaka Club, the members met at 5.30 pm every Tuesday. After 10 years of meeting at Dhaka Club, the venue was shifted to Rafflesia Serviced Apartments at Gulshan-1, however, the venue was been shifted to Hotel Westin in July 2010. Since August 2014, meetings are being held at Gulshan Club every Tuesday at 6 pm. The Club supervised a donation of US$ 50,000 received from the Rotary Club of Spoken South, RI District 5080, USA for a Hospital established at Nalta, Satkhira by Rtn Dr AFM Ruhal Haque a leading orthopedic surgeon of the country, an ambulance was also procured by Rtn Dr AFM Ruhal Haque from matching grant sponsored by the Rotary Clubs of Spoken South and Ramna. Ramna Rotary Club successfully monitored RI Funds for US$ 618,000 for 16 Deep Tubewells, 75 Shallow Tubewells, 2560 manually Operated Shallow Tubewells, 15,000 Sanitary Latrines and planted 5,000 Saplings (1989-90). The Club has recently signed an agreement between Rotary Club of Salzburg, Austria, Doctor’s for the Third Worlds Germany and Manda Bandhupratim School for disbursement of Euro 14,000 per month for 12 months to support the Manda School Program (1800 under privileged children) and to support the health care of slum dwellers of Kakrail, Gendaria, Khilgaon and Manda. An Endowment Fund was established initially with Tk 1.1 million and the fund has been invested for income.

RCR Meeting No-2059Professor Ainun Nishat, PhD delivered an excellent presentation on the proposed Padma Barrage with th...
02/06/2026

RCR Meeting No-2059
Professor Ainun Nishat, PhD delivered an excellent presentation on the proposed Padma Barrage with the learning context on the Teesta Barrage.

In 1325, a young Moroccan judge left his parents for the Hajj. He wouldn't return for 24 years. He was born in 1304 in T...
28/04/2026

In 1325, a young Moroccan judge left his parents for the Hajj. He wouldn't return for 24 years. He was born in 1304 in Tangier, into a family of legal scholars.

Ibn Battuta traveled 117,000 km — more than Marco Polo (24k) & Zheng He (50k) combined.

In the summer of 1325, a 21-year-old Maliki judge from Tangier named Ibn Battuta left his parents for the pilgrimage to Mecca. He would not see Morocco again for 24 years. By the time he returned, he had walked, sailed, and ridden some 117,000 km, farther than any premodern explorer in history, surpassing Zheng He's fleet (50,000 km) and Marco Polo's Silk Road (24,000 km) combined.

But Ibn Battuta was neither a merchant nor an admiral. He was a (faqīh) jurist trained in Islamic law, and his journey was shaped by two classical Islamic traditions: the hajj (pilgrimage) and the riḥla (travel in search of knowledge). He was born in 1304 in Tangier, into a family of legal scholars.

Cairo, Damascus, Medina, Baghdad. Then beyond: the Golden Horde's Volga steppes, the courts of the Delhi Sultanate (where he was employed as a judge), the Maldives (where he was half-kidnapped, half-bribed into staying as chief judge), and further still, Sumatra, Vietnam, and the Yuan Dynasty's China. In Hangzhou, he marveled at Chinese craftsmanship and noted the presence of Muslim merchants who had made the Silk Road a highway of faith as much as commerce. "The city is very large and well built," he wrote. "The buildings are tall, and there are many merchants and people of various trades".

Unlike Marco Polo, whose travelogue reads like an inventory of distances and commodities, Ibn Battuta's Rihla, formally titled "A Gift to Those Who Contemplate the Wonders of Cities and the Marvels of Travelling". He tells us what he felt: the weight of parting from living parents, the terror of shipwrecks, the humiliation of being robbed, the loneliness of a traveler without companion. As he wrote of his departure: "I set out alone, having neither fellow traveller. My parents being yet in the bonds of life, it weighed sorely upon me to part from them".

That emotional honesty is what distinguishes the Rihla from mere geography. Dictated to the Andalusian poet Ibn Juzayy at the request of the Marinid sultan Abu 'Inan, the text belongs to a sophisticated literary genre that blended autobiography, sacred geography, and administrative intelligence. It is not always precise; chronologies blur, place-names shift, but modern scholars, including the Moroccan editor Abd al-Hādī al-Tāzī, have affirmed its essential authenticity as a historical source. The Rihla offers us a vivid testimony of the 14th-century world: the decline of Muslim Al-Andalus, the Mongol successor states tearing across Central Asia, the prosperity of the Swahili coast, and, poignantly, the arrival of the Black Death in Damascus and Palestine as Ibn Battuta himself was present.

And yet, in the Western imagination, Marco Polo remains the emblem of medieval travel, despite having covered less than a third of Ibn Battuta's mileage and left behind none of his emotional richness. One literary critic observed: "When Marco Polo describes his arrival somewhere: he mentions the height of objects, the distance between them, the length of travel... He never includes himself, and his personality is an utter mystery. Ibn Battuta mentions his emotions in his first paragraph... and his individuality permeates every sentence". The question of why Polo became famous while Ibn Battuta languished in relative obscurity is not a question about distance traveled. It is a question about which stories the West chose to tell about itself.

Ibn Battuta died around 1368 or 1377, likely buried somewhere in Morocco. The Rihla survived in manuscript, copied and preserved in the great libraries of the Islamic world, but it was not widely known in Europe until the 19th century. As the editors of a recent scholarly volume put it, his journey "documents his personal experiences but also serves as a lens through which we can examine the complex interrelations of faith, commerce, and cultural exchange that shaped the medieval world.
Information courtesy : Islamic Scientific Heritage, https://x.com/IslamicSH_

RCR fortnightly meeting held on Tuesday, 17 February 2026, at 5:30 pm at the Westin Hotel, Gulshan, Dhaka. The guest spe...
17/02/2026

RCR fortnightly meeting held on Tuesday, 17 February 2026, at 5:30 pm at the Westin Hotel, Gulshan, Dhaka.
The guest speaker of the meeting Ms Tasnova Iqbal, architect and urban designer and Managing Director of Oikotan Architect Planner Artisan Limited delivered a presentation on "Analyzing Potentials of Local Waterfront and Appreciating Existing Waterfront."

It’s an honour to have fellow Rotarians from Rotary Club of Ilsun Jayro, Republic of Korea in RCR’s weekly meeting on 18...
18/01/2026

It’s an honour to have fellow Rotarians from Rotary Club of Ilsun Jayro, Republic of Korea in RCR’s weekly meeting on 18 January 2026.

Alhamdulillah! RCR had a great year .... challenges were transformed in to opportunities!
07/08/2025

Alhamdulillah! RCR had a great year .... challenges were transformed in to opportunities!

Address

Dhaka
1000

Opening Hours

18:00 - 19:00

Telephone

+88029344225

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